Workers' Party chief Pritam Singh’s trial over alleged lies to Parliament to start on Monday (Oct 14)


Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh leaving the Supreme Court on Sept 9 after the result of his application for a High Court trial. - Photo: ST

SINGAPORE: The trial of Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh is set to begin on Monday (Oct 14) at the State Courts.

Pritam, the secretary-general of the Workers’ Party (WP), is expected to contest two charges over alleged lies to a parliamentary committee convened in November 2021 to look into the lying controversy involving former WP MP Raeesah Khan.

The committee had found Khan guilty of abuse of parliamentary privilege and recommended that the former Sengkang GRC MP be fined S$35,000.

It had also recommended referring Pritam and WP vice-chairman Faisal Manap to the public prosecutor for possible criminal charges.

This was as Pritam had not been truthful in his testimony while under oath, while Faisal had refused to answer relevant questions that had been put to him, said the committee.

Pritam was charged on March 19, 2024, for giving false answers to the committee’s questions on Dec 10 and Dec 15, 2021, and the WP chief pleaded not guilty.

Faisal was not charged, but was issued an advisory by the police to familiarise himself with conduct expected of MPs.

This is the first time in post-independence Singapore that a person has been prosecuted under Section 31(q) of the Parliament (Privileges, Immunities and Powers) Act (PPIPA), which makes it an offence to lie in response to questions posed by Parliament or its committee.

For each charge, Pritam faces a maximum fine of $7,000, a jail term of up to three years, or both.

In December 2021, Parliament’s Committee of Privileges held hearings into an Aug 3, 2021, claim by Raeesah, who said she had accompanied a sexual assault victim to a police station, where the victim was treated insensitively. She repeated the claim before the House on Oct 4, 2021.

This was later found to be untrue, with Raeesah admitting to lying in Parliament and resigning from WP and as an MP in November 2021.

She said she had been sexually assaulted herself, and had heard about the victim’s experience at a support group session.

Pritam is alleged to have lied to the committee that after an Aug 8, 2021, meeting between him, Raeesah and WP leaders Sylvia Lim and Faisal, he wanted Raeesah to clarify in Parliament the untruth she told on Aug 3.

The WP chief is also alleged to have provided false testimony that at a meeting with Raeesah on Oct 3, 2021, he had asked her to come clean about her lie if the issue was brought up in the House on Oct 4.

An Attorney-General’s Chambers spokesman had earlier said that it would be seeking a fine for each of Pritam’s charges if he is convicted, adding that this was based on the “evidence presently available and considering the totality of the circumstances”.

The Constitution states that a sitting Member of Parliament will lose his seat if he is jailed for at least one year, or fined at least $10,000.

In 2022, the Constitution was amended to raise the fine quantum for disqualification from $2,000 to $10,000.

This was to account for inflation and to correspond to sentences handed down by the courts in Singapore for relevant offences today, the Elections Department said then.

Ahead of the trial, Pritam had made a bid in August to have his case transferred from the State Courts to the High Court, citing the case of former transport minister S. Iswaran, which secured a transfer on grounds of strong public interest considerations.

The Aljunied GRC MP also argued that his case would “benefit from the stature of a High Court judge”, who would not be “swayed by the political atmospherics that surround this matter”.

The prosecution, represented by Deputy Attorney-General Ang Cheng Hock, objected to the application.

Justice Hoo Sheau Peng dismissed the application on Sept 9, stating that the issue in Pritam’s case was a straightforward factual one, of whether he had wilfully given false answers before the parliamentary committee.

Deputy Principal District Judge Luke Tan will preside over the trial, which is fixed for 16 days until Nov 13.

Pritam’s lawyers are former prosecutor Andre Jumabhoy and Aristotle Emmanuel Eng Zhen Yang, from Jumabhoy’s law firm. - The Straits Times/ANN

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